1993 Board Members Appointed - ACS Publications

Board. Each January, membership is rotated as new appointees replace members whose terms have ... has four patents in analytical chemistry and diagnos...
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1993 Board Members Appointed Six new members have been selected to serve threeyear terms on ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY'S Advisory Board. Each January, membership is rotated as new appointees replace members whose terms have expired. Biographical sketches of the new members follow. Bruce Chase, a member of the re search staff of Du Pont since 1975, received his B.A. degree from Williams College in 1970 and his Ph.D. from Princeton University in 1975. Chase has conducted research in vibrational spectroscopy applied to industrial analytical problems. His current research interests include detection methods for near-IR Raman spectroscopy and instrument development for Raman measurements. Chase served on ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY'S Instrumentation Advisory Panel from 1988 to 1990. Joseph L. Glajch, associate director of the New Product Chemistry Group at Du Pont Merck Pharmaceutical Co., received his A.B. degree from Cornell University in 1975 and his Ph.D. from the University of Georgia in 1978. Glajch is responsible for formulation and methods development of radiopharmaceuticals at Du Pont Merck. The author of more than 30 publications, he also has four patents in analytical chemistry and diagnostic imaging. He is the current chairman of the ACS Division of Analytical Chemistry and is the ex officio member of the Board representing the Division. J o s e p h G. Gordon, a research staff member and manager of Materials Science and Analysis at IBM Research Division's Almaden Research Center, received his A.B. degree from Harvard College in 1966 and his Ph.D. from MIT in 1970. His research focuses on the composition and structure of solidliquid interfaces using a variety of in situ characterization techniques. David M. Haaland, a member of the technical staff at Sandia National Laboratories, received his B.S. degree from the University of New Mexico in 1968 and his Ph.D. from the University of Rochester in 1972. Haaland's interests include quantitative IR spectroscopy and chemometrics applied to gas analysis, en-

vironmental monitoring, microelectronics quality control, and noninvasive monitoring of blood glucose. Kiyokatsu Jinno, professor of materials science at Toyohashi University of Technology (Japan), received his B.S. degree (1968) and his Ph.D. (1973) from Nagoya University. His research focuses on the characterization of organic and biological compounds, computer techniques for chromatography/spectroscopy analyses, and design and synthesis of stationary phases based on molecular recognition. Gary E. Maciel, professor of chemistry at Colorado State University, received his B.S. degree from the University of California (Berkeley) in 1956 and his Ph.D. from MIT in 1960. Maciel's primary research interest is NMR spectroscopy of solids and surfaces with applications in catalysts, silica surfaces, organic polymers, ceramics, and coal. Established in the 1940s to advise the JOURNAL'S Editors, the board meets formally once a year at ACS headquarters. The board members are a vital link between the editors and the analytical community, providing guidance and advice on editorial content and policy. Leaving the Board are Alan G. Marshall, Ohio State University; John F. Rabolt, IBM; Debra R. Rolison, Naval Research Laboratory; Shigeru Terabe, Himeji Institute of Technology; and ex officio member Charles L. Wilkins, University of California, Riverside. Continuing to serve are Michelle V. Buchanan, Oak Ridge National Laboratory; M. Bonner Denton, University of Arizona; Joel M. Harris, University of Utah; Timothy Harris, Bell Laboratories; Franz Hillenkamp, University of Munster; Dennis C. Johnson, Iowa State University; Richard A. Keller, Los Alamos National Laboratory; Philip D. LaFleur, Eastman Kodak Co.; Géraldine L. Richmond, University of Oregon; Ralph Riggin, Lilly Research Laboratories; and Michael Thompson, University of Toronto.

New ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY Staffer Deborah Noble has joined the staff of ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY as an Editorial Assistant. Her responsibilities include handling BOOKS and NEW PRODUCTS, and writing FOCUS articles for the A-pages. She comes to the JOURNAL from Clinical Chemistry News, where she worked as a staff writer. She received her B.A. degree in chemistry from the University of Virginia and worked there for several years in a biochemistry research laboratory. ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY, VOL. 65, NO. 1, JANUARY 1, 1993 · 15 A